The Cornhill Magazine (Vol. I, No. 6, June 1860)
JUNE, 1860.
LONDON: SMITH, ELDER AND CO., 65, CORNHILL.
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JUNE, 1860.
2. If ever an invasion of England be attempted, the point to be aimed at by the invader will be the capture of London; and for the very simple reason that it alone would repay the cost and risks of an attack. If Portsmouth dockyard were destroyed, Devonport would remain; if both were lost, there would be Chatham; give all three to an enemy, and we have Pembroke; let him take all four, and England might still build ships in the Clyde and the Severn and the Mersey by private enterprise: better, perchance, than in royal dockyards, the gun-boat failures notwithstanding. An enemy would not be likely to place himself permanently on Portland Bill, or any other part of England; and certainly no burning of dockyards, or any other similar contingency, would be likely to induce England to capitulate and make terms. What might happen if a conqueror were to get possession of the Bank of England, and appoint a General of Division Governor pro tem. , who would make the bank parlour his head-quarters, and bid his soldiers mount guard over the bullion-vaults, it is difficult to say. With London in a state of siege, a Provost-Marshal installed at the Mansion House, a park of artillery on Tower Hill, the Royal Exchange and Guildhall converted into military posts, and a foreign soldiery quartered upon the inhabitants, there would be no “Quotations” of Consols on the Stock Exchange, nor any of the usual telegrams or leading articles in the newspapers. The Government would be powerless for anything but “making terms” with the invading foe; Parliament would be nowhere; martial law alone would prevail; our glorious old Constitution would be abrogated, and the monarchy itself might be in jeopardy. The day of England’s disgrace and humiliation might inaugurate a saturnalia of brutal soldiery; crime and misery, such as the imagination recoils from conceiving, might desolate our hearths and homes; and destruction of property to the value of untold millions would involve paralysis of commerce, death of credit, stoppage of manufactures, ruin of trade, and the dissolution of every bond of law and society: nay, even this frightful calamity might be heightened by the horrors of the sack of London.
Various
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CONTENTS.
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS.
London the Stronghold of England.
FOOTNOTES
Lovel the Widower.
The Maiden’s Lover.
The Portent.
FOOTNOTES
Studies in Animal Life.
CHAPTER VI.
FOOTNOTES
Framley Parsonage.
V.—Between London and Sheerness.
FOOTNOTES
An Austrian Employé.
Sir Self and Womankind.
The Poor Man’s Kitchen.
Roundabout Papers.—No. IV.
ON SOME LATE GREAT VICTORIES.
FOOTNOTES